History and Disposition of the U-85 By Joe Hoyt Introduction The U-85 is one of only 24 Type VII-B German U-boats ever built. It is certainly the only example of a Type VII-B in United States waters. It may also be the only example of a VII-B in waters accessible for traditional archaeological survey. The one possible exception is the U-74 near Cartagena, Spain.1 Unfortunately, most of the material remains have been haphazardly removed over the years by sport divers. This site was visited by navy divers just a day after its sinking, and in the 1960s was discovered by sport divers, after which it has been regularly visited. Virtually all loose artifacts externally have been collected by souvenir hunters, and the inside of the site has been indiscriminately dredged of nearly all of its contents. These activities have severely limited the type of archaeological research that can be conducted on this site, due to the absence of material cultural remains. There are however sections of the wreck that still have the potential to yield archaeologically important materials. Despite the widespread degradation of the site due to wanton looting, the hull itself still has archaeological significance due to such a small representation of subtype B. Additionally, the site still has a great deal of historic and economic significance. The history of the U-85 is important to American history because it was the first enemy submarine sunk by a US Navy warship in the Second World War. Additionally, 1 Axel Niestlé, German U-boat Losses during World War II: Details of Destruction, (Annapolis, Maryland: Naval Institute Press, 1998), 40. 2 the sinking of the U-85 was the first submarine kill in U.S. waters in the war.2 Documentation and preservation of this valuable historic site is long past due. History of the U-85 The U-85 was the third Type VII-B built at Flederwerft in Lübeck. The keel was laid on 18 December 1939 it was launched on 10 April 1940 and commissioned by 7 June with the Feldpost number 40 935. U-85 was attached the Third Flotilla based at Kiel and La Palice from June 1941 until the time of loss on 14 April 1942.3 Command of the U-85 was given to Oberleutnent zur See Eberhard Greger of the naval class of 1935. Greger was born on 15 September 1915 in Lieberose, Netherlands. Greger first served in the surface fleet as the Second Watch Officer on the destroyer Wolfgang Zenker from February through October 1939. In October, Greger began attending the U-boat training school and by January 1940 was assigned to the U-30 as First Watch Officer. The U-30 was a Type VII-A commanded by Fritz Julius Lemp. Lemp was one of the most famous U-boat commanders of the war. In October 1940, Lemp was given command of the U-110 a Type IX-B. At this time Greger joined Lemp for the Baubelehrung phase of the U-110 construction, after which he resumed his position as First Watch Officer. Greger remained in this position until April 1940, at 2 Karl Döenitz, War Diaries of the German Submarine Command 1939-1945, (Washington, D.C.: Office of Naval Intelligence, 1945), 28. 3 Kenneth Wynn, U-boat Operations of the Second World War, Vol. 1, (Annapolis, Maryland: Naval Institute Press, 1997), 64. 3 which point he began the U-boat commander’s course. After completion of his training he was assigned a crew and given command of the U-85.4 Greger’s first war patrol as Captain began on 28 August 1941. The U-85 was assigned to Group Markgraf along with thirteen other U-boats dispatched to patrol for convoys Southwest of Iceland. Setting out from Trondheim, U-85 immediately was subjected to harassment by patrolling antisubmarine aircraft. The first and second days of the patrol were not fruitful due this cover and the necessity to conduct evasive crash dives. Over the next two days the U-85 encountered one freighter which escaped, and another which was determined to be too small to be worthwhile. On 2 September the U- 85 was spotted by a patrolling aircraft which dropped three depths charges to no effect.5 Days went by with no luck. Döenitz and the Oberkommando der Kriegsmarine (OKM) were completely unaware that British code-breakers were successfully reading naval enigma encoded signals. In an effort to maintain this secret, the British decided to reroute convoys around known U-boats rather than to act tactically against them. Contact with convoys was extremely difficult. Greger was unaware of this, and likewise unaware that his former Captain, Fritz Julius Lemp, was partially responsible as a result of allowing U-110 and its secret materials to fall into British possession.6 In an effort to increase the possibility of contacting a convoy, Group Markgraf was ordered spread out over a larger area. Finally, on 9 September, U-85 and U-81 came across Slow Convoy 32. U-81 was able to sink one ship, but U-85 fired and missed their target. However, Greger was able to radio a contact report stating that he had come across 4 Rainer Busch and Hans-Joachim Röll, German U-boat Commanders of World War II: A Biographical Dictionary, (Annapolis, Maryland: Naval Institute Press, 1999), 86. 5 Report on the U-85, Sunk by the U.S.S. Roper on April 14, 1942, (Washington, D.C.: Navy Department, Office of the Chief of Naval Operations, 1942), 4. 6 Wynn, U-boat Operations of the Second World War, Vol. 1, 64. 4 a massive convoy with as many as 65 ships. As a result of this contact report, Döenitz activated the wolf-pack tactics by calling for all Group Markgraf U-boats to report to Greger’s position.7 During the attack on Slow Convoy 42, Greger fired five torpedoes which were failures, described as, “hot tube runners”.8 U-85 was able to sink one ship, the 4,748 ton British freighter Thistleglen on 10 September. In response, the Canadian escorts HMCS Skeena and HMCS Alberni delivered a very accurate depth charge attack. Greger narrowly escaped. The following day Greger surfaced the U-85 with the intent to conduct repairs and resume his patrol. During test diving, he determined that U-85 was not able to dive with the requisite effectiveness. The damage from the depth charge attacks was so great that he had no other alternative but to abort the rest of the mission and return St. Nazaire.9 Although Greger had to abort, the wolf-pack attack that he instigated continued for six more days. Several U-boats attacked in the end causing the loss of nineteen ships for a total of 74,574 tons. Up to that point, this was the second most successful attack on a convoy since the war began. Greger arrived at their new base at St. Nazaire on 18 September after 22 days at sea and the U-85 began repairs.10 Following repairs the U-85 transferred from St. Nazaire to Lorient on 11 October. After taking on fuel and fresh provisions Greger was ready to take U-85 on a second war patrol. This was a very frustrating and disappointing patrol for the U-85. British 7 Ibid., Clay Blair, Hitler’s U-boat War: The Hunter’s, 1939-1942, (New York, New York: Random House, 1996), 361 8 Report on the U-85, Sunk by the U.S.S. Roper on April 14, 1942, 4. 9 Ibid., Wynn, U-boat Operations of the Second World War, Vol. 1, 64.; Clay Blair, Hitler’s U-boat War: The Hunter’s, 1939-1942, 361. 10 Ibid. 5 intelligence on U-boat locations was so effective that the convoys were easily evading the U-85. The boat was plagued by rough weather, heavy antisubmarine patrols and elusive convoys. After having spent 43 days in the North Atlantic and being occasionally depth charged by planes, the U-85 found little and attacked nothing. Greger and his men returned to Lorient unsuccessful.11 The men of the U-85 enjoyed an extended stay in port. They did not embark on their third war patrol until 8 January 1942. By this time, the United States had entered the war and Germany was prompt in bringing U-boats to bear on the East Coast of the United States. The U-85 was among the second wave of type VIIs to be deployed in American waters. Due to the expanse of the area patrolled the wolf-pack tactics were not as practical and many vessels, though still in loose groups, effectively were operating individually. U-85 took a patrol station between Newfoundland and Nova Scotia.12 U-85 had no luck until 21 January. In the Mid-Atlantic, Greger fired four torpedoes at what was judged to be a 10,000 ton steamer. The crew of the U-85 claimed to have scored at least one hit, but the vessel evidently did not sink and no confirming allied records of this incident are known.13 On 28 January while operating off Newfoundland, the U-85 was attacked by with depth charges in what the crew described as a “baptism of fire.”14 The U-85 was rocked, but not seriously damaged. This attack is attributed to the Aviation Machinist Mate First Class Donald L. Mason. Mason attacked a sub on the surface in the same reported position on 28 January. Believing that he had been successful, his first report on the 11 Report on the U-85, Sunk by the U.S.S.
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